Residents of Wunsiedel, where Hitler's deputy Rudolf Hess is buried, are tired of yearly invasion of neo Nazis to their village, so they decide neo-Nazis can march for a good cause.
Marlene Halser
Published: 11.17.14, 16:10
They keep coming back year after year. Since the 1990s, neo-Nazi demonstrators invade the village of Wunsiedel in south Germany every November to commemorate the National Heroes' Remembrance Day by visiting the grave of Adolf Hitlers Deputy, Rudolf Hess, which was located in the village until it was dissolved in 2005 when the lease agreement ran out.
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Instead of taking the neo-Nazis seriously, this time they decided to play a prank on them. Under the slogan "Right against right: (rechts gegen rechts), Wunsiedel's residents gave the neo-Nazis' march a new purpose.
For each meter the neo-Nazis marched last Saturday throughout the village, local companies donated 10 euro for a project called Exit, a NGO that supports neo-Nazis who are ready to leave the milieu.
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"Wenn das der Führer wüsste" ("If the Führer would know"

said a pink banner they had to walk by, "Brisk like greyhounds, tough like leather, and generous like never before" ("Flink wie die Windhunde, zäh wie Leder, grosszügig wie nie"

said another one, in reference to former Nazi slogans from the Third Reich.
Even food was provided for the neo-Nazi protesters, who tried to ignore the prank as much as possible. Under a banner saying "Mein Mampf" ("My food"

instead of "Mein Kampf" (the title of Hitler's book), the village offered bananas to the demonstrators.
On the pavement, village residents had placed landmarks informing the marching neo-Nazis how much money they had already raised by walking through the village with a total of 10,000 Euro in donations collected for the NGO.
Full article:
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